Download EKG Basics - Practicum-Health-Science-I-2011-2012

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Myocardial infarction wikipedia , lookup

Cardiac contractility modulation wikipedia , lookup

Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia wikipedia , lookup

Electrocardiography wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
EKG Basics
Practicum I
2011-2012
Outline
1. Review of the conduction system
2. EKG waveforms and intervals
3. EKG leads
4. Determining heart rate
5. Determining QRS axis
The Normal Conduction System
What is an EKG?
The electrocardiogram (EKG) is a
representation of the electrical events of
the cardiac cycle.
Each event has a distinctive waveform,
the study of which can lead to greater
insight into a patient’s cardiac
pathophysiology.
What types of pathology can we
identify and study from EKGs?
Arrhythmias
Myocardial ischemia and infarction
Pericarditis
Chamber hypertrophy
Electrolyte disturbances (i.e.
hyperkalemia, hypokalemia)
Drug toxicity (i.e. digoxin and drugs
which prolong the QT interval)
Waveforms and Intervals
EKG Leads
Leads are electrodes which measure the
difference in electrical potential between
either:
1. Two different points on the body (bipolar
leads)
2. One point on the body and a virtual
reference point with zero electrical
potential, located in the center of the heart
(unipolar leads)
EKG Leads
The standard EKG has
12 leads:
3 Standard Limb
Leads
3 Augmented Limb
Leads
6 Precordial Leads
The axis of a particular lead represents the
viewpoint from which it looks at the heart.
Standard Limb Leads
Standard Limb Leads
Augmented Limb Leads
All Limb Leads
Precordial Leads
Adapted from: www.numed.co.uk/electrodepl.html
Precordial Leads
Summary of Leads
Bipolar
Limb Leads
Precordial Leads
I, II, III
-
(standard limb leads)
Unipolar
aVR, aVL, aVF
(augmented limb leads)
V1-V6
Arrangement of Leads on the EKG
Anatomic Groups
(Septum)
Anatomic Groups
(Anterior Wall)
Anatomic Groups
(Lateral Wall)
Anatomic Groups
(Inferior Wall)
Anatomic Groups
(Summary)
Determining the Heart Rate
Rule of 300
10 Second Rule
Rule of 300
Take the number of “big boxes” between
neighboring QRS complexes, and divide
this into 300. The result will be
approximately equal to the rate
Although fast, this method only works for
regular rhythms.
What is the heart rate?
www.uptodate.com
(300 / 6) = 50 bpm
What is the heart rate?
www.uptodate.com
(300 / ~ 4) = ~ 75 bpm
What is the heart rate?
(300 / 1.5) = 200 bpm
The Rule of 300
It may be easiest to memorize the following
table:
# of big
boxes
1
2
3
4
5
6
Rate
300
150
100
75
60
50
10 Second Rule
As most EKGs record 10 seconds of rhythm
per page, one can simply count the number of
beats present on the EKG and multiply by 6 to
get the number of beats per 60 seconds.
This method works well for irregular rhythms.
What is the heart rate?
The Alan E. Lindsay ECG Learning Center ; http://medstat.med.utah.edu/kw/ecg/
33 x 6 = 198 bpm
The QRS Axis
The QRS axis represents the net overall
direction of the heart’s electrical
activity.
Abnormalities of axis can hint at:
Ventricular enlargement
Conduction blocks (i.e. hemiblocks)
The QRS Axis
By near-consensus, the
normal QRS axis is
defined as ranging from
-30° to +90°.
-30° to -90° is referred
to as a left axis
deviation (LAD)
+90° to +180° is referred
to as a right axis
deviation (RAD)
Determining the Axis
The Quadrant Approach
The Equiphasic Approach
Determining the Axis
Predominantly
Positive
Predominantly
Negative
Equiphasic
The Quadrant Approach
1. Examine the QRS
complex in leads I
and aVF to
determine if they are
predominantly
positive or
predominantly
negative. The
combination should
place the axis into
one of the 4
quadrants below.
The Quadrant Approach
2. In the event that LAD
is present, examine
lead II to determine if
this deviation is
pathologic. If the QRS
in II is predominantly
positive, the LAD is
non-pathologic (in
other words, the axis
is normal). If it is
predominantly
negative, it is
pathologic.
Quadrant Approach: Example 1
The Alan E. Lindsay
ECG Learning Center
http://medstat.med.utah.
edu/kw/ecg/
Negative in I, positive in aVF  RAD
Quadrant Approach: Example 2
The Alan E. Lindsay
ECG Learning Center
http://medstat.med.utah.
edu/kw/ecg/
Positive in I, negative in aVF

Predominantly positive in II
Normal Axis (non-pathologic LAD)

The Equiphasic Approach
Determine which lead contains the
most equiphasic QRS complex. The
fact that the QRS complex in this lead
is equally positive and negative
indicates that the net electrical vector
(i.e. overall QRS axis) is perpendicular
to the axis of this particular lead.
Examine the QRS complex in whichever
lead lies 90° away from the lead
identified in step 1. If the QRS complex
in this second lead is predominantly
positive, than the axis of this lead is
approximately the same as the net QRS
axis. If the QRS complex is
predominantly negative, than the net
QRS axis lies 180° from the axis of this
lead.
Equiphasic Approach: Example 1
The Alan E. Lindsay ECG Learning Center ; http://medstat.med.utah.edu/kw/ecg/
Equiphasic in aVF  Predominantly positive in I  QRS axis ≈ 0°
Equiphasic Approach: Example 2
The Alan E. Lindsay ECG Learning Center ; http://medstat.med.utah.edu/kw/ecg/
Equiphasic in II  Predominantly negative in aVL  QRS axis ≈ +150°